Israel´s parliament said on Monday it could dissolve its current
session later the same day, paving the way for an early vote that
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is hoping to hold on September 4.

"We are proposing September 4," Netanyahu told a morning meeting of
his cabinet, a day after formally announcing he would seek to move up
elections but without specifying a date.

The draft bill to dissolve the Knesset has already raced through a
ministerial legislative committee and on to the Knesset house
committee.

There it was given special fast-track approval for an immediate
debate and first reading, committee chairman Shimon Malka told AFP.
Knesset speaker Reuven Rivlin said the bill could also pass its
second and third readings and become law by the end of the day, with
the house going into a pre-election recess at once.

"The bill to dissolve the Knesset will be put to a first reading,
then there will be a debate on other government bills," the
parliamentary spokesman´s office quoted Rivlin as saying.

"Rivlin left room for the possibility that the Knesset could tonight
complete legislation for dissolving (itself)," it added in a
statement.

"The Knesset will go into pre-election recess immediately after the
legislation is complete," it quoted Rivlin as saying. "That could
happen during the coming night or during Tuesday."

Netanyahu´s timetable has come under fire from the ultra-nationalist
Yisrael Beitenu, the centre-right Kadima party, and the centrist
Independence party.

All three parties want to delay dissolving the Knesset until MPs have
voted on a new law governing military service for ultra-Orthodox Jews.
But in an apparent nod to them, the ministerial legislative committee
also fast-tracked their bills on the issue, allowing them to be put
to an early vote, Israeli media said.

Rivlin said that bills approved for a first reading on Monday would
be allowed to go to second and third readings during the recess.
On Sunday night, Netanyahu announced his intention to bring forward
the elections from the scheduled date of October 2013.

"I don´t want there to be a year-and-a-half of political instability
accompanied by blackmail and populism. I´d prefer a short electoral
campaign of four months that will ensure political stability," he
told a meeting of his rightwing Likud party in Tel Aviv.

His speech ended months of speculation about whether he would seek to
bring forward the elections in a bid to bolster his position and
capitalise on his popularity.